Someone on Amazon decried this piece of literature as "dry as the Gobi desert" and that the author was potentially "biased against Chinese society". I certainly don't see what he based the second comment on. I can see how the prose might plausibly be considered dry. However, I myself was enthralled by it because of it richness in detail. Contrary to some historical literature which tell history in a very narrative way so to speak, with this book I never found myself interrupted by a sense that something was missing in terms of explanation of the events and actions that I was reading about. Having read some chinese history already, with Rebellions and Revolutions I probably felt for the first time that I got a really detailed, nuanced, dispassionate and matter-of-fact (perhaps dry, but I don't mind dry - superficial is worse for me) account of the events during the last 200 hundred years of chinese history. I kept feeling like Gray had the approach of an Economic historian, with ample economic data and careful tracing of domestic supply chains (like the explanation why British wool didn't succeed in Chinese markets). Controversial figures like Mao, and controversial events like the Opium Wars are both treated with surprisingly restrained and dispassionate language, giving me instead a much fuller understanding of both. Frankly, reading a history book, I prefer a solid analysis of the course of history and, indeed, dry explanations of causes and motivations, rather than diatribes or lamentations about the evils of Mao and imperialism. And I feel you got the first one with this book. If I was more interested and caught up in the style of writing I might well have found it "dry", but I give this one 5 stars on the merit of giving me a deeper and more nuanced understanding of the course of modern chinese history.